1. Chances of a very special universe that is life supporting by accident: billion to one
2. Chance of a fine tuner who exists in a non fined tuned environment: considerably higher
1) What is your definition then?
2) I am thinking of everything in 4d spacetime mode. So space is analogous to time. So like every object has a spacial starting point(s), it also has a temporal starting point.
3) How about the physical pre-conditions that result in an event happening.
4) -
5) What is your definition then? — Devans99
Until you account for the "starting" point on any surface, like the surface of a sphere, you got nothing here, either spatially or temporally. You could make it all a hypothetical, as in, "if" x then y, but that gets you exactly nowhere in your thinking.So space is analogous to time. So like every object has a spacial starting point(s), it also has a temporal starting point. — Devans99
Like the great chain of causation? Chains, of course, are made of links - that's the idea, yes? - but links don't make the chain. The missing ingredient is the linking of the links to make a chain, and never mind the phenomenology here. If you want to argue in terms of causes, then you have to have a good grasp of linking. Perhaps the difficulty of this question, or at least it's problematic nature, is why formal science thinks in terms of fields, and leaves "causes" for informal and descriptive exposition. This, btw, having been explicitly expressed to you by several people several times.3) How about the physical pre-conditions that result in an event happening. — Devans99
Non sequitur.So you think that a greater than any finite number of days (or Planck intervals if you prefer) has passed? — Devans99
Of course you don't. :yawn:I don't see how anything at Planck-scale could possibly be responsible for something like the BB — Devans99
Repeating this uncorroborated and unsound assertion (i.e. g/G of the gaps) doesn't make it so. Besides, "first cause" is jabberwocky like first integer ... or north of the north pole.There is nothing without a first cause; it determines and defines everything else in existence. — Devans99
You are not able to give a satisfactory reason why the argument does not work, so I will keep posting it; it is a sound argument. — Devans99
Then it must have tuned itself while it was beyond space and time. Of course it’s possible, you should know, it’s simply a special kind of universe. — Zelebg
God is superfluous proposition that does not answer any questions -- god is fine tuned to create life, so there must be a god-tuner. Do you see? — Zelebg
The length of a circumference can be measured with a finite (natural) number of [units-of-choice] and yet it's unbounded. — 180 Proof
I don't see how anything at Planck-scale could possibly be responsible for something like the BB
— Devans99
Of course you don't. :yawn: — 180 Proof
Repeating this uncorroborated and unsound assertion (i.e. g/G of the gaps) doesn't make it so. Besides, "first cause" is jabberwocky like first integer ... or north of the north pole. — 180 Proof
In short, I think time is defined by how we observe it, use it, and understand it in use. — tim wood
Until you account for the "starting" point on any surface, like the surface of a sphere, you got nothing here, either spatially or temporally. You could make it all a hypothetical, as in, "if" x then y, but that gets you exactly nowhere in your thinking. — tim wood
Perhaps the difficulty of this question, or at least it's problematic nature, is why formal science thinks in terms of fields, and leaves "causes" for informal and descriptive exposition. This, btw, having been explicitly expressed to you by several people several times. — tim wood
You want your designer/g/God, even at the cost of rationality. But all you've done is pushed the can - the question - down the road. As a presupposition, you would have it that it works in your argument. But then it poisons your whole argument. "If frogs had wings...". Great, but at the moment frogs don't have wings. Your argument becomes one of flying frogs. That is, even if you had your g/God, then where (when, why, how) did it come from? Always there? Turtles all the way down? I call this argument the fallacious appeal to the greater nonsense. — tim wood
God is not fine tuned to create life; it is a natural instinct for all intelligent beings to desire information and life is information.
To express the argument in the OP an bit more succinctly:
1. The universe is fine-tuned for life so there must be a fine tuner (99.999% probability)
2. Can’t be an infinite regress of fine tuners (100% probability)
3. So there must be an uncaused fine tuner in a non-fine tuned environment (99.999% probability)
Obviously then god must be fine-tuned to have information deficit, natural instincts and desire to create life, therefore there must be god-tuner. — Zelebg
Do you understand that postulating god, even if it explained the existence of the universe, does not explain god’s existence nor any of its properties, and that you are left with bigger mystery than before? — Zelebg
It's clear that either you do not or will not or cannot understand. One last attempt: tell us in your own words exactly what you think time is. — tim wood
The whole story of the universe only hangs together if there is a timeless, uncaused cause that fine tunes and creates spacetime; there is simply no other explanation that is as satisfactory in a logical sense as some sort of creator. It's almost certain that time has a start and something timeless and causally effective is required to create time.
I've already told you. Again:
- Its a degree of freedom, like a dimension, only we can only move one way through it
- It is part of the fabric of the universe; not some manmade creation (see the speed of light) — Devans99
Yet 'the kalam' doesn't sufficiently explain anything in a physical sense.... there is simply no other explanation that is as satisfactory in a logical sense as some sort of creator. — Devans99
God is fine-tuned to produce life in the same way you concluded the universe is fine tuned. — Zelebg
You do not have an explanation. You just substituted one mystery with another, bigger one. Why does the universe exist - because of god. Why does god exist? — Zelebg
A specific mystery ("cause of the big bang") 'resolved' by a general mystery ("uncaused, or so-called 'first', cause")??? — 180 Proof
Causality itself (i.e. the cosmos) is an 'effect' of a ... 'cause'??? (via antiquated newtonian "billiards" metaphor of cause-effect . — 180 Proof
No that's not the case; intelligent creatures are interested in information; IE other intelligent creatures. Its just natural to want to fill the emptiness with something.
There is no reason for God's existence
God is fine tuned to be exactly in the way of whatever properties you imagine it to have, so fine tuned to be interested in information, thus fine-tuned to create life. — Zelebg
And also, god creating the universe would be artificial, while it is only natural for the nature of the universe to naturally produce life, obviously. — Zelebg
1. Time has a start
2. Universe is not in equilibrium
3. Causality based arguments
4. Fine tuning
5. Big Bang
6. Aquinas 3rd argument
That's a lot of evidence for a creator of the universe; verses precisely none against that you and others have offered up. — Devans99
No, all intelligent creatures are basically the same; an information processor (mind) and a memory. All intelligent creatures desire information. So left with a blank, empty universe, any intelligent creature would try to create something to occupy him (IE spacetime).
There is no fine-tuning of God.
It is very unnatural for a universe to create life; nearly all hypothetical universes would not support it.
My feeling is that there is a 10% chance of no God and a 90% chance of God.
:rofl: No doubt about that!Seems perfectly straight-forward to me. — Devans99
Oh yeah, I'm "searching"; but clearly you don't "think".I think you are searching ...
For starters ... read Hume. Read Stenger. Read Deutsch & Rovelli.Causality rules our lives; there is nothing we can be more certain of than causality.
The only one "foolish" around here is you, kid, for denying fundamental physical reality (i.e. quantum uncertainty ... to wit: the BB was a planck event, and therefore a-causal (i.e. @ its planck radius 13.8 billion years ago, the universe's 'initial conditions' were set by random 'vacuum fluctuations' re: CMB)) while pimping strawmen to distract(?) from, or compensate(?) for, your inadequate, antiquated, pseudo-scientific woo. :lol:Ignoring the pivotal role of causality is extremely foolish of you.
By that token, if statements "look" stupid then probably they're author is stupid. :razz:If something looks very unnatural then it probably is unnatural.
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